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Why Gas Fees Exist (And Why They Suddenly Spike)

By Keerthana G · Published May 4, 2026 · 4 min read · Source: Web3 Tag
EthereumBlockchain
Why Gas Fees Exist (And Why They Suddenly Spike)
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Why Gas Fees Exist (And Why They Suddenly Spike)

Keerthana GKeerthana G4 min read·Just now

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Competing for the finite space.

Most people first notice gas fees when something feels off.

You try to send a small amount of crypto, and the fee is unexpectedly high. Sometimes higher than the transaction itself.

At that point, it feels arbitrary.

But gas fees are not random. They’re a direct consequence of how blockchains are designed.

What You’re Actually Paying For

When you submit a transaction, you’re asking the network to do three things:

None of this is free.

Every node in the network processes that transaction. Validators verify it. The result becomes part of a system that is replicated globally.

Gas is simply a way to measure how much work your transaction requires.

And the fee is what you pay to have that work prioritized.

Why ‘Gas’ Exists Instead of Flat Fees

In a traditional system, fees are fixed because a central server controls capacity.

In a blockchain, capacity is limited and shared.

Each block has a maximum amount of computation it can handle. On Ethereum, this is defined by the block gas limit.

So instead of charging a fixed fee, the system uses a pricing model based on:

This creates a market.

The Real Mechanism: Limited Block Space

A block can only include a certain amount of gas.

That means only a limited number of transactions can fit inside it.

When you send a transaction, you’re not just submitting data.

You’re competing for space in the next block.

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If demand is low:

If demand increases:

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Why Fees Spike Suddenly

Gas fees don’t increase gradually. They spike.

That’s because demand on blockchains is not smooth — it’s event-driven.

A few common triggers:

1. High-Activity Events

When something popular launches — like an NFT mint or token sale — thousands of users try to transact at the same time.

They all compete for the same limited block space.

2. Arbitrage and Bots

Automated systems constantly monitor price differences across platforms.

When an opportunity appears, bots submit transactions aggressively, often with higher fees to get priority.

This pushes normal users out of the next block.

3. Network Congestion

If blocks are consistently full, the mempool grows.

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Transactions that don’t offer competitive fees get delayed, forcing users to increase their bids.

The Fee Structure (What You’re Actually Paying)

On Ethereum, gas fees are split into two parts:

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The base fee adjusts automatically depending on how full previous blocks were.

If blocks are consistently near capacity, the base fee increases.

If usage drops, it decreases.

This is why fees can rise quickly during sustained demand.

Why This System Exists at All

It might seem inefficient.

But without gas fees, the network would have no way to:

Gas fees act as both:

The Trade-Off

Gas fees highlight a core tension in blockchain design.

The system is:

But those properties come with constraints:

So instead of fixed pricing, you get a dynamic market.

Why This Feels Worse Than Web2

In most applications today, you don’t think about infrastructure costs.

They’re abstracted away.

In Web3, those costs are exposed directly to the user.

You see them every time you interact with the system.

That makes inefficiencies visible — but it also makes the system more transparent.

Where This Is Going

Most current development is focused on reducing the impact of gas fees without removing the underlying model.

This includes:

The goal isn’t to eliminate fees entirely.

It’s to make them less noticeable while preserving the system’s guarantees.

The Useful Way to Think About It

Gas fees are not just a cost.

They are a signal.

They tell you:

Once you see it that way, sudden spikes stop feeling random.

They become predictable outcomes of a system where:
everyone is competing for the same finite space.

This article was originally published on Web3 Tag and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

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